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Knowledge base on
current mortgage rate refinancing
Secondary Mortgage Market Sets the Standards and Practices for Mortgage Lending
The Secondary Mortgage Market is responsible for the setting many of the rules and common practices that determines who gets a home loan. The secondary market includes Fannie Mae (Federal National Mortgage Association or FNMA), Freddie Mac (Federal Home Loan Corporation or FHLMC), Ginnie Mae (Government National Mortgage Association or GNMA) and a variety of other investment oriented institutions.
These institutions set the standards because they are the ones that will often buy and service your home loan after you have purchased your property. Although your lender handles all of your initial paperwork, there are several well established steps to take your Mortgage out of their hands and into the secondary market where additional fees, manpower and time that will be invested in servicing your home loan for a typical period of 15 to 30 years.
They Lend Money to Your Lender
Once your lender sells you home loan on the secondary market, it frees up the money to make another loan to another consumer looking to purchase their own property. Its an intricate revolving system that was set up after the depression and refined after the massive Savings and Loans scandals in the 1980s. It prevents your Mortgage Lender from running out of available cash when they approve lots of loans and assures you that each loan application gets a fair review regardless of the type, size and geographic location of your lender.
How does this all affect you?
Since your loan will spend the majority of its lifetime floating in the secondary market, they institutions involved have setup strict guidelines and requirements that determine what type of information is needed from you before they can work with your loan. All of the guidelines are based to some extent on the systems set up by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
As each lender determines the type of risk they can absorb in the marketing they may work strictly within the guidelines of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac or they may take a more flexible approach to approving their loans. The guidelines of these Mortgage giants are constantly changing, therefore, it is to your advantage to seek out a reputable company and Mortgage Broker that will fully comprehend them and know how they apply to your particular mortgage file.
Even better, get to know the players and rules on your own. Never be at mercy of a banker or Mortgage Broker again. For information visit the home pages of the following organizations:
Fannie Mae http://www.fanniemae.com
Freddie Mac http://www.freddiemac.com
Ginnie Mae http://www.ginniemae.gov
Syd Johnson is the Executive Editor of RapidLingo.com, Financial Solutions Website. You can see more articles at http://www.rapidlingo.com. This article may be freely distributed as long as the author's bio is included with an active link to http://www.rapidlingo.com.
More Useful Resource and Updates on current mortgage rate refinancing
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- How Will The Rate Cut Affect Your Mortgage? (The Motley Fool)
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- Jobless rate jumps to highest since '94 (Denver Post)
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- Perpetual reopens income/mortgage funds (The West Australian)
Fund manager Perpetual Ltd has re-opened applications for its income and mortgage funds at the request of a number of clients.
- (AFX UK Focus) 2008-11-05 21:35 US mortgage rates fell on Wednesday - BestInfo (Interactive Investor)
NEW YORK, Nov 5 (Reuters) - The average rate on a 30-year U.S. mortgage with no upfront points fell 1/8 of a percentage point on Wednesday to 6 percent, according to BestInfo Inc. If the mortgage market on Thursday continues in its current direction, rates may remain the same. The 30-year mortgage rate with one upfront point fell 1/8 of a percentage point to 5-3/4 percent. The 30-year mortgage ...
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